Discover good books--both fiction and nonfiction--and build your own reading lists. NoveList can also help you find the reading order of books in a series; find authors, titles or series similar to your favorites; and find book club discussion guides. Video demonstrations

Also available as a free monthly publication distributed at the library, BookPage recommends the best books for readers of all types, whether you're interested in literary fiction or romance, history or science fiction, cookbooks or children's books, with a focus on new releases.

The reviews in Library Journal are mostly written by librarians, and widely read by other librarians who are making budget- and time-conscious purchasing decisions. The reviews tend to be short and to the point. Comparative evaluations between closely related nonfiction books can be particularly helpful.

If the mysteries you are picking up are as stale as a week-old corpse, this reference can help you find a fresh corpus. Well, fresh to you. Each writer selected for inclusion has been influential, particularly prolific, and/or very popular. Essays on genre themes examine coherence and influences between writers, such as "Black Detective Fiction," "Religious Mysteries," "The Spy Thriller" and many others. Those essays are in the back of the second volume, but we won't tell anyone if you flip ahead to peek. We know you don't do that when you read your mysteries.

Digital and on-air discussions focused on great reads from up-and-coming authors and old favorites. Share your thoughts and insights with the TODAY anchors, featured authors, and other fans through Google Hangouts.

Helps you find the order of books in a series. A series is two or more books linked by character(s), settings, or other common traits, such as Sue Grafton's "A is for Alibi", "B is for..." etc. or the "Star Wars" series.